University of Virginia Library

CHAST FLORIMEL.

I

No, I'll endure ten thousand deaths,
E'er any farther I comply;
O! Sir, no man on earth that breathes,
Had ever yet his hand so high.

119

II

O! take your sword and pierce my heart,
Undaunted see me meet the wound;
O! will you act a Tarquin's part?
A second Lucrece you have found.

III

Thus to the pressing Corydon,
Poor Florimel, unhappy maid,
Fearing by love to be undone,
In broken, dying, accents said.

IV

Delia, who held the conscious door,
Inspir'd by truth and brandy, smil'd,
Knowing that sixteen months before,
Our Lucrece had her second child.

V

And, hark ye, Madam, cry'd the bawd,
None of your flights, your high-rope dodging;
Be civil here, or march abroad;
Oblige the 'Squire, or quit the lodging.

VI

O! have I, Florimel went on,
Have I then lost my Delia's aid?
Where shall forsaken virtue run,
If by her friends she is betray'd?

VII

O! curse on empty friendship's name;
Lord, what is all our future view?
Then, dear destroyer of my fame,
Let my last succour be to you.

VIII

From Delia's rage, and Fortune's frown,
A wretched love-sick maid deliver;
O! tip me but another Crown,
Dear Sir, and make me Your's for ever.